Transcript

I [INAUDIBLE] bakeries. When I take a day off from my regular job, I'm coming here to help. When we go down to Welfare Square, we go with friends from the ward. And it's a gathering; it's a fun experience. We visit, we help, we share, and it all makes it worthwhile. You just cannot do too much with good people doing good things. I don't know how to explain it in any other way except it just fills your soul to know that you can give. And then it becomes not about you, not about me, not about anything except being the hands of the Lord and loving other people. It is an indescribable, incomparable feeling. We know that that night there'll be trucks taking bread throughout the Western part of the United States, not for sale, but to give to bishops who in turn make sure that it goes to those who are in need. That gives you a great feeling of being useful. I'll never know who receives the loaves of bread that we bag and slice at the bakery. I will never know these people, and you know what? It doesn't matter, because I know that they're all children of God. And I know that I love my Father in Heaven so much that I would do anything for Him and for His children. This is just Church members willingly giving of their time to help. And there is a shortage of that throughout the world.

Deseret Bakery

Description
Bakery volunteers tell how they are blessed to help those in need. After the bread is ready, that evening trucks take the bread throughout the western United States—not to sell, but to give to those in need.
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